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Understanding Why Women Talk The Way They Do

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Men say women talk too much. Well, they are right. Even women tell men that are quarrelsome that they “talk like women” (go figure). But women don’t ‘talk too much’ they only ‘talk differently’. Just hang on, more light will be thrown on this later.

If I’m asked, I’ll say that the way women talk has something to do with the societal influence (you know the ‘talk like a woman’ thing?) and hormonal make-up. If you have noticed, a woman has a cycle that she passes through within each month. In a month, a woman completes this cycle by passing through different stages, which ends where it started. Each stage of this cycle brings a different personality in her because of the different dramas played by her hormones – she has the lamb stage, tigress stage, snake stage and the dove stage (please don’t quote me). So, the stage you meet a woman in determines the type of response and reaction you get from her. Just stating this here because a priest just advised a man to know when to balk if her wife brings up the ‘woman’s madness’ in her. So, don’t blame women when they all of a sudden act ‘somehow’ because it technically isn’t their fault.

Whether it is hormone or society, the major thing is that men and women talk differently. These two different genders have been discovered to relay the same message using different languages or varieties of a language – men use more formal language while women stick to informal tone.

Now, I want to give a brief example of this assertion. If you tell a man and a woman (you are close to) that you like their outfits, their responses will be more like this:

Man: Thank you. (end of discussion)

Woman: Wow! Are you serious? Thank you. You just made my day. Are you sure you are not pulling my legs because you did it the other day? This clothe is cheap o, I just bought yesterday from …… (story continues and may even bring on more unrelated stories).

All these stories by the woman don’t make her vain, brainless or talkative, like most men assert, it’s just the way she was programmed. If you cut her short she will think you are insensitive or something; so just allow her to flow because it’s her way of telling you that she appreciates your kind gesture.

Well, below are the characteristics of women’s speech and writing patterns (like some of you must have noticed in mine – lol).

  1. Embellishments: Women embellish their expressions; they don’t use plain language. They use lots of idioms, innuendos, similes, ‘codes’ and some imaginative details in their speech and writing. For example, where a man will say “walk fast”, a woman will say “walk like you’re in a hurry”, or “don’t walk like a snail” and things like that. The thing is, women don’t talk plainly. Whatever they tell you isn’t the real message because it is just the surface meaning; look deeper and you will understand what they truly mean (sorry I can’t explain further than this).
  2. Use of Adverbs: I read somewhere that people should minimise the use of adverbs in their speeches and writings because it makes them sound unsure. Well, I didn’t blame the writer because he’s a man, and wouldn’t understand why women will say things like “the food was just so, so hot” instead of saying “the food was hot”.
  3. Use of Informal Language: I stated this earlier. Women use more of casual expressions than men. I don’t really know, but I think that’s one of the reasons children are closer to their mothers – they make conversations easier. Women are chatty in their discussions because they make greater use of everyday language in speeches and writings. They are more comfortable with ‘unserious’ languages than their male counterparts. Now you understand why most women don’t like discussing business ideas with men unless the man doesn’t sound too technical.
  4. Verbosity: Women ‘talk too much’ because they use lots of words to explain a simple phenomenon. A man will go straight to the point and hit the nail on the head but a woman will take her time, beat around the bush and employ all the words employable to explain that concept. This quality makes women better teachers and mentors. It also makes them sound more polite.
  5. Endearments: Use of terms of endearment is characteristic of women’s speech. I can’t explain why but it is true. You may notice that even as an adult your mother still calls you ‘nwa m’ (my child), ‘dear’, and other endearing names. If you greet a man he will just answer you back and maybe add a passive “How are you?”; but a woman will embellish the response with endearing terms.
  6. Use of Descriptive Language: Women describe rather than prescribe. In prescription, you go straight to the point to tell the person what to do. But in the description, you employ lots of words to paint images in the mind of your listener or reader so that he will understand what needs to be done. I don’t know if this makes sense.
  7. Request: Men command (or rather, demand) while women request. If you have tasted both male and female bosses, you will understand. This is the reason a male boss will say “you” while a female one uses “we”.
  8. Questions: Yes, women ask lots of questions while talking. It takes other women and men that understand the language of women to know that those aren’t questions, but statements in question forms (you may call it rhetorical questions). So when next a woman asks you if you went for a meeting, don’t just tell her ‘yes’ and wait for more questions. What she’s actually saying is, “tell me what happened at the meeting” or “why you went for the meeting”.
  9. Use of Emotive Language: If you leave a woman to handle the affairs of the world alone, she may cause World War III. This is because she has this innate gift of using words to create strong emotions that can cause people to act (positively or negatively) against their wills. So, when next a woman tells you something that ‘scatters your head’, pardon her, na the way she was programmed o. Mind you, every woman has this quality; that you haven’t seen it in the woman around you is because she has not been given the opportunity to use it. The only problem I see here is that this quality prevents most women, if not all, from seeing things objectively. So I think we women need to work seriously here so we can only use this special gift positively.
  10. Uncertainty: Women always sound uncertain when they talk. They cover this up sometimes by using hanging sentences and expressions like “I don’t know …”, “I think …”, “it could be …” and so many others that expose them for being less dogmatic. Note that this doesn’t mean that you can impose your own opinion on them; this quality only makes them look submissive when they may not really be so. I think this quality is influenced by the society.

So, next time you talk to a woman, give her speech to write, or a business letter to produce, remember why she sounded the way she did. And women, I believe you have gained a little insight into why you just can’t sound like your male colleagues despite how hard you’ve tried.

Choosing The Perfect Lighting For Your House

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Have you ever visited a friend and fall in love with the lighting in the house?

I could remember when I visited a friend in Port Harcourt, the house is simply a heaven on earth. I could feel the warmth and beauty surrounding his home. The lights outside the building are so well combined that everything contrasts perfectly.

The lighting in the house actually caught my eyes and melted my heart. Indeed, we do not need much to have a beautiful home. The beauty of his home really captivated my heart, so I decided to write about it for anyone who is trying to set up his or her house. 

Lighting within the house is one amongst those things that we do not tend to continuously notice; once it has a decent presence. However, when the lighting is poor and we are attempting to perform a task, we notice it now. Lighting is for ambiance, aesthetics, tasks, and seeing better within the home. Why not think about your home and brainstorm all the lighting qualities you need. Perhaps, you can add more beauty to it, therefore, making it lovely for you to stay and also welcoming for anyone who wants to visit you.

If you have been looking for a way to beautify your new home, perhaps you are planning to move house this December and you don’t have a proper answer yet; here are some tips to think about on a way to select the perfect lighting for you and your family:

  • Determine what your lighting goals are: Ambient or lighting features are employed for ambiance and for the lighting of an area. Once chosen, you’ll begin to settle on lighting choices. Each room in your home should have a mood you want to set, as well as a function you want your lighting to serve. For instance, the reading room should have very bright lighting. The rooms should have both the bright and dim lights. 
  • Give lighting for safety and security on the outside of your home: Most homes in Nigeria do not have lights outside. It makes it easier for intruders to break in. Walkways, sidewalks, the perimeter of your house, and also the front entry ought to be lit with close lighting. Too dim of lighting on the outside may be a welcome sign for intruders. Whereas too bright of exterior lighting is expensive and distressing to neighbors. Take into account putting in floodlights at the outside corners of your home that are motion activated to further deter intruders. 
  • Inside your home, make use of multiple light sources for one space: For rooms like bedrooms and living areas, multiple lighting sources can assist you to attain a range of functions and activities therein house. Within the kitchen, and underneath, counter lights will give nice task lighting. Whereas in a very front room, pick a lamp next to a couch or favorite reading chair. In bathrooms, the lighting at the mirror ought to be free from shadows and obtrusive light. Remember, it is your home. It must look like a heaven on earth. 
  • Research chandeliers wisely for Informal living and dining areas: In areas that a proper chandelier is taken into account, select one which will not make your house outdated. Usually, time’s chandeliers are bought doltishly for the house and the interior decoration that surrounds them. Chandeliers are available in very simple styles that embody candles, tiny bulbs, or a couple of lights to the ornate and expensive crystal varieties. Whichever is your interior decoration selection, decide the house, and ceiling height before ordering, to make sure enough headspace is on the market below the hanging chandelier.

Final Word

Don’t be afraid when selecting lighting for your home, it will facilitate your ambiance and mood within the house. Similar to the color of your rooms, lighting ought to enhance your house and build it, to feel heat and welcoming.

You often heard of the word, ”see Paris and die.”

This simply means everything about Paris is beautiful. When I actually made a research, I realized that the beauty of these lovely state is down to the lighting that surrounds it. No wonder, it is regarded as the most beautiful place in the world.

MTN Begins the Dislocation of Nigeria’s Banking Competitive Space

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MTN Nigeria begins the dislocation of Nigeria’s banking sector. Yes, MTN MoMo Agency is expanding and banking will never be the same; Abuja, Lagos, Port Harcourt, Ibadan and Kano are done, with the beautiful Owerri next. There is something amazing about telcos – they know how to build a tribe. It requires a special capability and compensation model to have those airtime sellers diligently do their jobs across every part of Nigeria. If they deploy such know-hows in the mobile money domain, MTN will have more “banking” customers than all total unique bank customers in Nigeria combined, by 2025 (that number is less than 40 million today using BVN). 

Change is coming and even fintechs will experience a new dimension of competition. MTN Nigeria begins with 61 million customers into MoMo agency – that is more than the population of South Africa. As Samuel reports, the agents came out in Kano because everyone hopes the airtime party model will continue into MoMo agency. They will not be disappointed because telcos are vertically amazing when it comes to taking care of their tribes and chains of command!

The launch witnessed a massive turn up of traders who were introduced to the platform; many were registered as MoMo agents, and there was a raffle draw that enabled attendees to win gifts of household items.

MoMo was launched in August 29, 2019, as part of MTN’s support to Central Bank of Nigeria’ drive for financial inclusion. Since then, it captured Abuja, Lagos, Port Harcourt and Ibadan, the Oyo State capital. MTN said that the next city MoMo will be launched in is Owerri.

Banks and fintechs – the beast has arrived, and you need new playbooks. The liberation (of customers) is here and a new basis of competition is playing. Your playbook must evolve, otherwise, it would be extinction.

MTN Nigeria Takes MoMo Agent to Kano

 

MTN Nigeria Takes MoMo Agent to Kano

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Y’hello Digital Financial Services (YDFS) Limited, a subsidiary of MTN Nigeria, has launched its financial service product named MoMo Agent in Kano.

The launch was held at Danbatta and Wudil markets in Kano. Speaking at the event, the Senior Manager, Sales and Distribution, MTN Nigeria, Kano, Kumar Abubakar, said there is need to bridge the gap between the banked and unbanked, especially in Danbatta area of Kano.

He said that a large number of the town’s populace are either unbanked or underbanked.

“About 75 percent of the population in this part of Kano are financially excluded; they have not been covered and find it difficult to do cash transactions,” he said.

MTN has 61 million subscribers in Nigeria; four million of them are in Kano. However, Abubakar said the company is going to leverage on the voluminous number of subscribers to close the existing gap in financial services in the state.

“If you look at other competition we have in Nigeria, you will see that they have restrictions. They have a lot of plans in Nigeria but they don’t have coverage.

“So, what we leverage on is our customer base such that everywhere you go you will find an agent close to you and effect your transaction. What we are planning is to cover beyond the INEC’s polling unit per community in order to have a wide reach-out for transaction,” Abubakar added.

The launch witnessed a massive turn up of traders who were introduced to the platform; many were registered as MoMo agents, and there was a raffle draw that enabled attendees to win gifts of household items.

MoMo was launched in August 29, 2019, as part of MTN’s support to Central Bank of Nigeria’ drive for financial inclusion. Since then, it captured Abuja, Lagos, Port Harcourt and Ibadan, the Oyo State capital. MTN said that the next city MoMo will be launched in is Owerri.

Abukakar explained that the target of YDFS is to have 50,000 people before the end of the year. He noted that Kano already has 3,000 agents.

“The idea behind the regional launch and sensitization event is part of the YDFS’s mission to put financial services within easy reach of every bankable Nigerian. With MoMo Agent service complementing existing banking services via extending access to simple money transfer services and other financial services nationwide, the subsidiary plans on rolling out about 500, 000 Agents across Nigeria, as well as the Federal Capital Territory,” he said.

Hello, is it me you’re looking for? Telecoms and Politics in Africa

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Glo

I see MTN has been in the news too often lately… That got me thinking about my reflections on the telecoms landscape in the past decade going back to my observations and reporting of “A preliminary assessment of Middle East investments in sub-Saharan Africa: Insights from the mobile telecom sector.”

The article summed up as follows:

in order to derive any medium? to long?term opportunities in the African mobile telephony market, both existing and potential investors would need to ponder over a number of concerns and/or questions arising from this article—notably, what are the key drivers behind this growth? Who are the key players driving this pattern of investments? Why the renewed interest in Africa from Middle East telcos? How has the landscape changed in terms of innovation and value added?

Answers to these parting questions remain: especially in terms of drivers and value-added.

In a follow on article,  Entrepreneurship Development in Africa: Insights from Nigeria’s and Zimbabwe’s Telecoms, political connections was observed as a driver or break depending on whose side you’re on.

Here we highlighted the challenges and opportunities for entrepreneurship development in two sub Saharan African (SSA) contexts as a point of departure. The study explored two countries with nothing in common besides the metropolitan (or colonial if you like) history.

Both case illustrations signpost emerging issues in enterprise development through compelling success stories of entrepreneurship initiatives despite infrastructural challenges and unstable economic and political landscapes experienced in the two SSA countries in recent years.

Drilling down from the country level evaluation, the enterprises and their founders are profiled with a view to generating areas for future research exploration.

Specifically, Nigeria’s Globacom, founded by Mike Adenuga, and Econet Wireless, founded by Zimbabwean Strive Masiyiwa, contribute, we hope, to current discourse on a “new generation” and perhaps learning from the “old guard” of enterprise development in SSA.

It was our hope that the article, back then and even more so now that the discourse: “would make for a good class discussion/ debate for academics teaching on entrepreneurship, innovation, and international business subject areas – and especially those in African universities or those outside the region, but also delivering courses related to that discipline.”

Where is the value added?

Read More:

Madichie, N. O. (2011). A preliminary assessment of Middle East investments in sub?Saharan Africa: Insights from the mobile telecom sector. Thunderbird International Business Review53(1), 79-92.

Madichie, N. O., Mpofu, K., & Kolo, J. (2017). “Entrepreneurship Development in Africa: Insights from Nigeria’s and Zimbabwe’s Telecoms”. In Entrepreneurship Development in Africa: Insights from Nigeria’s and Zimbabwe’s Telecoms. Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill. doi: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004351615_009